Dilbert, the well-known comic strip by cartoonist Scott Adams about the office everyman and his crew of incompetent colleagues, was the first syndicated comic that focused primarily on the workplace when it launched in 1989.

The New Yorker receives around 1,000 cartoons each week; it only publishes about 17 of them. In this hilarious, fast-paced, and insightful talk, the magazine's longstanding cartoon editor and self-proclaimed "humor analyst" Bob Mankoff ....

An MSNBC host says kids belong to communities, not their parents, and the chorus of "parents do too own them!" thunders through the talkosphere. Tristan Shoubt brings both sides up short in his latest cartoon. To share, link to the source page or ema

Another fun political cartoon from Tristan Shoubt pokes fun at the now infamous DHS "Active Shooter Situations" video. To share with friends, link to the host page or email tristan.shoubt@comcast.net for permission.

Via the SuppleMentally blog at WordPress.com, here's the latest cartoon from Tristan Shoubt with a typically odd slant on Senator Rand's filibuster on drones. To share, link to the blog page or write for permission to tristan.shoubt@comcast.net.

Marco Rubio said this week that Obama's immigration plan was "dead on arrival." Cartoonist Tristan Shoubt interpreted that a bit differently than most would. ;-) To share with friends, link to source page.

Radiolab covers the strange saga of Marvel Comics's fight against the US customs authority over whether X-Men dollies were "dolls" or "toys" -- the difference being that dolls (which are defined as characters that represent humans) are taxed at twice

No doubt, sometimes a political cartoon can tell a better and more complete story than the written word alone ever could!
Take the show South Park. While you may not always agree with the message, you will usually remember it due to the direct way